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TEXTUAL ANALYSIS AND TEXTUAL THEORY Session Eight Søren Hattesen Balle English Department of Culture and Identity
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Page 1: Session Eight Søren Hattesen Balle English Department of Culture and Identity.

TEXTUAL ANALYSIS AND TEXTUAL THEORY

Session Eight

Søren Hattesen BalleEnglish

Department of Culture and Identity

Page 2: Session Eight Søren Hattesen Balle English Department of Culture and Identity.

Agenda

Introduction: the summary assignment for today and next time

Introduction: today’s session Presentation:

fiction and non-fiction travel writing Romantic and Victorian travel

Class room discussion: Robert Louis Stevenson, Travels with a Donkey in the

Cevenne (1879) travel writing and the thematic function of comic

anomaly, displaced romance, and allegory

Page 3: Session Eight Søren Hattesen Balle English Department of Culture and Identity.

Fiction, non-fiction, and the literary mind

Fictional and non-fictional contracts: Virginia Woolf, Orlando: A Biography and ”William J. Clinton”

The literary mind

Page 4: Session Eight Søren Hattesen Balle English Department of Culture and Identity.

Travel and Travel Writing

Why travel? Why write or make tv programmes about

travel? Why read about travel? Why watch travel programmes http://palinstravels.co.uk/index.php

Page 5: Session Eight Søren Hattesen Balle English Department of Culture and Identity.

Travel writing: the key aspects according to Fussel

Fiction Comic novel Romance

Quest Pastoral Picaresque

Allegory

Non-fiction: Essay Memoir Autobiography

Page 6: Session Eight Søren Hattesen Balle English Department of Culture and Identity.

Elements of non-fiction in travel writing

Essay: moral purpose Memoir: encounters with great men /

important events Autobiography

Page 7: Session Eight Søren Hattesen Balle English Department of Culture and Identity.

Elements of fiction in travel writing

Comic novel Comic anomalies: normal vs weird

Page 8: Session Eight Søren Hattesen Balle English Department of Culture and Identity.

Elements of fiction in travel writing

Romance Quest: tripartite structure (home-away-home)

Page 9: Session Eight Søren Hattesen Balle English Department of Culture and Identity.

Elements of fiction in travel writing

Romance Pastoral:

Contrasts between an observer and the observed:

Rich – complex – sophisticated - city – morally inferior

Poor – simple - country – morally superior Pastoral elegy

Lament of loss, change, or death

Page 10: Session Eight Søren Hattesen Balle English Department of Culture and Identity.

Elements of fiction in travel writing

Romance Quest: tripartite structure (home-away-home) Pastoral (elegy):

Contrasts between an observer and the observed:

Rich – complex – sophisticated - city – morally inferior

Poor – simple - country – morally superior Picaresque: Real vs ideal. Deflation

Page 11: Session Eight Søren Hattesen Balle English Department of Culture and Identity.

Elements of fiction in travel writing

Allegory: primary and secondary orders of signification

Travelling = living and dying (life is a journey)

Travelling = reading and writing (what is suggested about the activities of reading and writing?)

Page 12: Session Eight Søren Hattesen Balle English Department of Culture and Identity.

Elements of fiction in travel writing

Allegory Travelling = reading and writing Traveller = reader or writer Unknown = the text

Page 13: Session Eight Søren Hattesen Balle English Department of Culture and Identity.

Travel writing as ”displaced” romance

”All this is to suggest that the modern travel book is what Northrop Frye would call a myth that has been ’displaced’ – that is, lowered brought down to earth, rendered credible ’scientifically’ […]” (Fussell 1980: 208)

Page 14: Session Eight Søren Hattesen Balle English Department of Culture and Identity.

Romantic and Victorian travel

Tourists, travellers, and art Ruins Landscapes

The beautiful: Culture, art: pleasure The picturesque: mediation between the

beautiful and the sublime The sublime: Nature: awe, horror, fear

Page 15: Session Eight Søren Hattesen Balle English Department of Culture and Identity.

Caspar David Friedrich (1774-1840), Wanderer above the Sea of Fog (1818)

Page 16: Session Eight Søren Hattesen Balle English Department of Culture and Identity.

Anon. The Lonely Wanderer (Photo) www.travelblog.org/Photos/1816850.html

Page 17: Session Eight Søren Hattesen Balle English Department of Culture and Identity.

J.M.W. Turner, Tintern Abbey (1794)

Page 18: Session Eight Søren Hattesen Balle English Department of Culture and Identity.

Dr. Syntax

Page 19: Session Eight Søren Hattesen Balle English Department of Culture and Identity.

Intertextuality

Stevenson’s dedication Intertextuality and allegory John Bunyan, The Pilgrims Progress

(1678)

Page 20: Session Eight Søren Hattesen Balle English Department of Culture and Identity.

R. L. Stevenson, Travels with a Donkey in the Cevenne (1879)

Outline the uses of fictional elements: Comic novel (Does

Stevenson use comic anomalies? How and Why?)

Romance (how and why are the romance elements used?) Quest Pastoral Picaresque

Allegory (Of reading? Of writing? Of life?)

Outline the uses of non-fictional elements Essay (is Stevenson

making a moral point?)

Memoir: Do we learn something about famous people and places?

Autobiography: Do we learn something about Stevenson’s life

Page 21: Session Eight Søren Hattesen Balle English Department of Culture and Identity.

R. L. Stevenson, Travels with a Donkey in the Cevenne (1879), p. 8 My Dear Sidney Colvin, The journey which this little book is to describe was very agreeable and

fortunate for me. After an uncouth beginning, I had the best of luck to the end. But we are all travellers in what John Bunyan calls the wilderness of this world—all, too, travellers with a donkey: and the best that we find in our travels is an honest friend. He is a fortunate voyager who finds many. We travel, indeed, to find them. They are the end and the reward of life. They keep us worthy of ourselves; and when we are alone, we are only nearer to the absent.

Every book is, in an intimate sense, a circular letter to the friends of him who writes it. They alone take his meaning; they find private messages, assurances of love, and expressions of gratitude, dropped for them in every corner. The public is but a generous patron who defrays the postage. Yet though the letter is directed to all, we have an old and kindly custom of addressing it on the outside to one. Of what shall a man be proud, if he is not proud of his friends? And so, my dear Sidney Colvin, it is with pride that I sign myself affectionately yours,

R. L. S.

Page 22: Session Eight Søren Hattesen Balle English Department of Culture and Identity.

R. L. Stevenson, Travels with a Donkey in the Cevenne (1879)